1

I'm trying to make a function that changes the query result value to the values in a textbox. I can run the LINQ query, get the values, and read can print the perfectly... But when I try change the queried value to the textbox value, I get the following error:

Property or indexer 'AnonymousType#1.FirstName' cannot be assigned to -- it is read only

Here is the code:

    private void editQuery(int contactID)
    {
        ContactLINQDataContext context = new ContactLINQDataContext("Data Source=WORK-PC;Initial Catalog=Steve Harvey Team;Integrated Security=True");
        var editContact = (from Contacts in context.Contacts
                           join prop in context.Properties on Contacts.Address equals prop.PropertyID
                           join spouse in context.Contacts on Contacts.Spouse equals spouse.ContactID
                           where Contacts.ContactID == contactID
                           select new
                           {
                            ID = Contacts.ContactID,
                            FirstName = Contacts.FirstName,
                            LastName = Contacts.LastName,
                            FirstName2 = spouse.FirstName,
                            LastName2 = spouse.LastName,
                            Street = prop.Street,
                            City = prop.City,
                            State = prop.State,
                            ZIP = prop.ZIP,
                            Phone1 = Contacts.Phone,
                            Phone2 = Contacts.AltPhone,
                            Email = Contacts.Email,
                            ContactType = Contacts.Type,
                            Assets = Contacts.Assets,
                            Notes = Contacts.Notes,
                           }).First();

        editContact.FirstName = firstNameBox1.Text;

I thought it might be because I am trying to change a var type, but I don't see how I could change the type and still update the value. Any ideas?

UPDATE

I found a solution that finally worked for me. Thank you posters who replied and set me on the right track. I detailed my solution in a comment below.

4 Answers 4

3

It's because you're trying to change the value of an anonymous type - there's not such thing as a var type; that's just telling the compiler to infer the type of the variable from the expression on the right-hand side of the assignment operator. The properties in anonymous types are always read-only. You'll need to create another instance:

editContact = new {
    editContact.Id,
    FirstName = firstNameBox1.Text,
    LastName = editContact.LastName,
    ...
};

Note that you need to specify all the properties, with the same types, in the same order - that way the two anonymous type creation expressions will be of the same type.

2
  • But if I make another instance, how can I go about submitting the changes back to the database? Doesn't LINQ only keep track of the object that the original query was assigned too? Nov 14, 2014 at 17:42
  • 1
    @Corvertbibby: I wouldn't expect you to be able to submit an anonymous type back to the database anyway, although I could be wrong...
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 14, 2014 at 17:43
1

Anonymous types in C# are immutable; in other words, they cannot be changed. They don't have property set methods.

You can create a new anonymous type with the values if that helps.

0

If your intent is to edit an entity and then save it back, you need to return the entity object(s) rather then an anonymous type that new {...} gives you:

    ContactLINQDataContext context = new ContactLINQDataContext("Data Source=WORK-PC;Initial Catalog=Steve Harvey Team;Integrated Security=True");
    var editContact = (from Contacts in context.Contacts
                       where Contacts.ContactID == contactID
                       select Contacts
                       }).First();

    editContact.FirstName = firstNameBox1.Text;
0

I found what I find the be the best solution to my problem. The main problem, as the other commenters have pointed out, is that the var type is an anonymous type. So then the question is, what type can I use? Well, I found that I can actually use my tables as a type, which works even better than a var. The following snippet is an example of a lambda LINQ query:

    using (ContactLINQDataContext context = new ContactLINQDataContext("Data Source=WORK-PC;Initial Catalog=Steve Harvey Team;Integrated Security=True"))
    {
        Contact contact = context.Contacts.SingleOrDefault(x => x.ContactID == contactID);
        Contact spouse = context.Contacts.SingleOrDefault(x => x.ContactID == contact.Spouse);
        Property property = context.Properties.SingleOrDefault(x => x.PropertyID == contact.Address);
}

This runs 3 separate queries. A query in the contact table to get the contact row using the ContactID provided, a query in the contact table to get the spouse information using the ID in the Spouse column as the ContactID, and a query in the Property table using the info in the Property column of the initial Contact query for the Property ID.

Once these queries were executed, I was able to reference the data directly from the newly created variables.

    using (ContactLINQDataContext context = new ContactLINQDataContext("Data Source=WORK-PC;Initial Catalog=Steve Harvey Team;Integrated Security=True"))
    {
        Contact contact = context.Contacts.SingleOrDefault(x => x.ContactID == contactID);
        Contact spouse = context.Contacts.SingleOrDefault(x => x.ContactID == contact.Spouse);
        Property property = context.Properties.SingleOrDefault(x => x.PropertyID == contact.Address);

        firstNameBox1.Text = contact.FirstName;
        lastNameBox1.Text = contact.LastName;
        firstNameBox2.Text = spouse.FirstName;
        lastNameBox2.Text = spouse.LastName;
        streetBox.Text = property.Street;
        cityBox.Text = property.City;
        stateBox.Text = property.State;
        zipBox.Text = property.ZIP;
        phoneBox.Text = contact.Phone;
        altPhoneBox.Text = spouse.Phone;
        emailBox.Text = contact.Email;
    }

And sure enough, it works like a charm. The text boxes were populated perfectly.

1
  • var is not a type. It is a keyword to tell the compiler to figure out what the type should be and use that instead. The type of editContact is an IEnumrable<T> where T is an anonymous type. The use of var just prevents you from needing to type that out (which is handy, because, being anonymous, there is no way to type out the name of the real type; it has no name).
    – Servy
    Nov 19, 2014 at 18:59

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